The article explores the migration of indie-auteurs to television during the 2010s. Using David Fincher and Steven Soderbergh’s work on House of Cards and The Knick as case-studies, the article argues that talent intermediaries such as producers and talent managers have sought to mobilize the indie-auteur, a branded identity and authorial discourse, to package premium television programmes to exploit growing competition between channels and platforms. The article also explores repercussions of the indie-auteur’s insertion in television as a mark of distinction, arguing that it becomes increasingly important to be aware of the systems behind it
In the era of TVIII, characterized by deregulation, multimedia conglomeration, expansion and increas...
This thesis explores the emergence and significance of internet-distributed television by unpacking ...
This thesis examined the contemporary U.S. popular culture, specifically the Netflix series House of...
My paper takes The Knick (2014-2015) as a case-study for exploring the role of Anonymous Content, a ...
As Mark Gallagher outlines, ‘filmmakers and critics repeatedly invoke creative affiliations between ...
In the 2010s, an increasing number of indie-auteurs, filmmakers associated with American indie film,...
In Television Studies, scholars have regularly analysed authorship as a branded identity and promoti...
Prestige Television explores how a growing array of 21st century US programming is produced and rece...
My paper takes The Knick (dir. Soderbergh, 2014) as a case study for exploring a possible convergenc...
This article engages the metaphor of showrunner as auteur to examine freedom of expression in televi...
This book explores how the digital multiplatform delivery of television is affecting the role perfo...
The choice of content and number of technologies that audiences view television with are increasingl...
Elizabeth Blakey Published Online: 2017-11-30 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.1515/culture-2017-0029. ...
My dissertation investigates the idea of cinematic authorship in a twenty-first-century mediascape i...
'House of Cards' was a $100 million, 13-episode TV series starring Kevin Spacey and directed by Davi...
In the era of TVIII, characterized by deregulation, multimedia conglomeration, expansion and increas...
This thesis explores the emergence and significance of internet-distributed television by unpacking ...
This thesis examined the contemporary U.S. popular culture, specifically the Netflix series House of...
My paper takes The Knick (2014-2015) as a case-study for exploring the role of Anonymous Content, a ...
As Mark Gallagher outlines, ‘filmmakers and critics repeatedly invoke creative affiliations between ...
In the 2010s, an increasing number of indie-auteurs, filmmakers associated with American indie film,...
In Television Studies, scholars have regularly analysed authorship as a branded identity and promoti...
Prestige Television explores how a growing array of 21st century US programming is produced and rece...
My paper takes The Knick (dir. Soderbergh, 2014) as a case study for exploring a possible convergenc...
This article engages the metaphor of showrunner as auteur to examine freedom of expression in televi...
This book explores how the digital multiplatform delivery of television is affecting the role perfo...
The choice of content and number of technologies that audiences view television with are increasingl...
Elizabeth Blakey Published Online: 2017-11-30 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.1515/culture-2017-0029. ...
My dissertation investigates the idea of cinematic authorship in a twenty-first-century mediascape i...
'House of Cards' was a $100 million, 13-episode TV series starring Kevin Spacey and directed by Davi...
In the era of TVIII, characterized by deregulation, multimedia conglomeration, expansion and increas...
This thesis explores the emergence and significance of internet-distributed television by unpacking ...
This thesis examined the contemporary U.S. popular culture, specifically the Netflix series House of...